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Facebook Agrees To User Safety Plan 190

Facebook has reached an agreement with the attorneys general of 49 states and the District of Columbia to develop and enhance controls to protect minors from inappropriate content. This follows a similar commitment from MySpace several months ago. The lone holdout in each case was Texas. News.com notes: "In the deal, the social network has agreed to develop age verification technology, send warning messages when an under-18 user may be giving personal information to an unknown adult, restrict the ability for people to change their ages on the site, and keep abreast of inappropriate content and harassment on the site. While the agreement is with U.S. state authorities, Kelly said that the tools deployed will apply to Facebook's international users as well. More than half of the site's 70 million users are outside the U.S."
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Facebook Agrees To User Safety Plan

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  • For God's sake (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Rik Sweeney ( 471717 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @05:32AM (#23347782) Homepage
    Maybe Facebook should also be made to come round to people's houses and teach them how to wipe their arses properly.

    While Facebook might have to provide some responsibility, the 49 states and Columbia should actually tell the PARENTS to supervise their child's usage of the internet.
    • Re:For God's sake (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Grimbleton ( 1034446 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @05:49AM (#23347868)
      I agree. I'm sick and tired of the government stepping in where they shouldn't. Aw, little Susy sent out naked pictures to her friends? Great, let's educate her and her parents, not hold the service she used to perform an action with responsible. Where's the personal responsibility these days?
      • Why not just outlaw internet use for those under 18? Before you laugh or mod me troll, hear me out:

        Youngsters don't need the internet to do research as they could go to a library and do their research the old-fashioned way. Youngsters have cell phones and text messaging, and if they don't have that then they could play sports or participate in a myriad of activities for social bonding.

        The internet is like a playboy magazine: it has articles totally unrelated to sex, and it has the pictures - would you le
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by FiestaFan ( 1258734 )
          Yes, and the same with TV and radio.
          • TV and radio are not bidirectional. A kid could see a murder on TV but if he thinks its cool to kill(and especially if he directly imitates the act) then he's an idiot and deserves to be punished. But, TV won't pretend to be an underage chick telling your kid to meet him at the park so that it can give him candy :)
            • TV and radio are not bidirectional. A kid could see a murder on TV but if he thinks its cool to kill(and especially if he directly imitates the act) then he's an idiot and deserves to be punished. But, TV won't pretend to be an underage chick telling your kid to meet him at the park so that it can give him candy :)

              TV may not be bidirectional, but the universe is. So if you stab someone, the consequence could be that they'd bleed to death. Another part of the universe, comprised of braincells contained within biological systems (often known as law enforcement bodies) will upon receiving this information (through lightwaves, soundwaves initiated by similar brain cells contained within any human subset of the class of organic systems etc.) would trigger a process that stimulates other brain cells in its proximity until

        • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 09, 2008 @06:16AM (#23347970)
          HOW exactly was THIS modded UP?! I mean WHAT?! Even as AC, I am shocked.

          Oh sure, I am 18 now and working as search engine optimizer and PHP coder. Learning these skills from library, with years old books, etc. without the access to internet would have been kinda... impossible? People don't NEED the internet and neither they NEED moder medicine. Maybe we should also make medicine illegal for people under 18 because some can become drug addicts.
          • by Arccot ( 1115809 )

            HOW exactly was THIS modded UP?! I mean WHAT?! Even as AC, I am shocked.
            It's modded "Interesting". Meaning some people may not agree with the poster, but the poster made an attempt to come up with an argument that isn't overhashed around here.

            It's an interesting opinion and an interesting point of view. There's no reason to squelch an opinion here just because you don't agree.
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Nathrael ( 1251426 )
          Yeah, right. Because a small minority is unable to use something properly, outlaw it for all others as well. Make all people suffer because some people made errors. With the same mentality, pretty much everything should be outlawed, since you can always find a way to misuse something.
        • by digitig ( 1056110 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @09:47AM (#23349186)

          Why not just outlaw internet use for those under 18? Before you laugh or mod me troll, hear me out: Youngsters don't need the internet to do research as they could go to a library and do their research the old-fashioned way. Youngsters have cell phones and text messaging, and if they don't have that then they could play sports or participate in a myriad of activities for social bonding.
          Because growing up is about learning to live in the adult world. If we keep kids wrapped in cotton-wool and safe from the world until their 18th birthday, when you turn them loose they just won't be able to deal with what they encounter. Parenting, education and so on are largely about getting the kids used to the risks of real life, in a controlled way. Yes, that has its own risks -- kids will have to be exposed to the dangers of the real world in order to learn to cope, and sometimes they will fail to cope. So the risks need to be managed and controlled, but we must be aware that if we eliminate risk kids won't learn to deal with it. There will be tragedies, but that's because life is dangerous, not because we've under-legislated.

          • I'm not for censorship. I'm for spying on children.
            If parents think their teenager is mature enough for uncensored internet access, thats fine with me.

            But when the teenager uploads private information like their real name, their telephone number, their address, the ISP should send a letter to the parents telling them the list of sites which this information was uploaded to, or the list of IP addresses.

            And there should be corporations setup with the specific purpose of helping parents to spy on their childre
            • The technology needs to be in place to help parents spy on their children more easily.
              The technology for everything you mention is easily available, and needs no further action from ISPs or legislation. I've used it, and it was a waste of time and money, because it told me less than talking to my kids did. I guess I needed to learn that technology is no substitute for relationships. A lesson that perhaps not everybody learns.
        • No, the internet is more like .. the real world, where people can go into shops and get dirty magazines if they want them. Sure, the internet is faster and anonymous, enabling minors to get access to the stuff very easily, but it's not *exactly* the same as just giving someone a dirty magazine. And parents can always install a content filter that can eliminate a lot of the rubbish. Letting the kids keep phones is stupid because of the price involved there compared to say using MSN (which you can also do on

          • The best solution, is for parents to demand that ISPs offer internet monitoring services.

            Certain keywords they select should be flagged.
            Personal information should also be flagged.

            When their children upload this information to the ISP, the ISP should keep it on record just as banks keep on record when you make a transaction.

            If the child gives their name and address to the internet, the parent should know the list of websites and IP addresses that this information was passed onto. If it's uploaded to the IP
        • Why not just outlaw internet use for those under 18?

          Why not just go all the way and lock them all in prison? It'd just be for their own good, and then we could stop from ... *gasp* ... having sex!

          Or maybe you could just try to think a little and realize that teenagers have been fucking each other as long as there's been a human race and it has conspicuously failed to bring about the end of the world thus far. What kind of lives do you think these kids are having that stopping them from using the Inter



        • Let's set up businesses to help parents spy on their childrens internet access. All communication uploaded which includes certain search terms or real names, addresses and other private information should be flagged and recorded.

          A company could form to monitor the internet activity of their children for parents.
      • by elucido ( 870205 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @06:46AM (#23348108)

        Lets solve this problem once and for all and come up with ONE age of consent. One age which applies to all US territories and the internet, so that adults can know when they are breaking the law.

        To have no age of consent is equal to having the drinking age be different in every state and having some states have bars with minors in them and other states having bars set to be over 21.

        You cannot govern this way.
        • by JimBobJoe ( 2758 )
          To have no age of consent is equal to having the drinking age be different in every state

          This was the case for a couple decades...between the setting of the national drinking age and several decades after prohibition (when age became important in the US.)

          It really wasn't that much of an issue.
        • by CSMatt ( 1175471 )
          The problem arises in defining just what that age of consent is. Right now, the majority of voters in some states tend to favor a high age of consent, while the majority of voters in other states favor a lower age of consent. Nationalizing it will only cause these two ideologies to fight with each other over what age of consent should be imposed on the nation.
      • Because the voters seem to be damn inclined for the government to take care of their...

        retirement
        health care
        schooling of their children
        mortgages

        How are those three a function of government? I really don't understand how people who send their kids to public school can complain about government censorship related to children. Really, what do you think goes on in your schools? You can't get information in some states about what actually does go on. Worse, in a few medical issues with your children is off l
        • by c6gunner ( 950153 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @07:17AM (#23348234) Homepage

          Because the voters seem to be damn inclined for the government to take care of their...

          retirement
          health care
          schooling of their children
          mortgages

          How are those three a function of government? I really don't understand how people who send their kids to public school can complain about government censorship related to children. Really, what do you think goes on in your schools?
          Apparently, NOT learning how to count :)

          You're absolutely right, though. The more "liberal" (really socialist) a country gets, the more it becomes dependant on the government. You can't offer people cradle-to-grave welfare, free education, pretty much guaranteed medical help, etc, etc, without at least a small segment of your society regressing to the point of becoming children in adult bodies. If you then expect those individuals to raise children of their own, you're just asking for problems.
          • The more "liberal" (really socialist) a country gets, the more it becomes dependant on the government. You can't offer people cradle-to-grave welfare, free education, pretty much guaranteed medical help, etc, etc, without at least a small segment of your society regressing to the point of becoming children in adult bodies. If you then expect those individuals to raise children of their own, you're just asking for problems.

            Of course! That is why in all the societies which were not "liberal" or "socialist"


            • I'd consider myself a libertarian socialist, socialism is good as long as liberty is maximized.

              Socialism without liberty however is just glorified slavery, and this is why I'm not a Stalin socialist Democrat, or a Hitler fascist Republican.

              I don't support any party which reduces my quality of life, no matter what the ideology is or the promises they make. I want liberty because it improves my quality of life, and as long as I'm not harming anyone, the government has no moral basis with which to remove my li
              • I see what you are saying, but the problem goes like this: the other "libertarians" consider any encroachment on their ability to essentially enslave people economically (or in some cases by means of private gangs, militias, armies and what not) as not acceptable. Their idea of "freedom" is being free to own you. "Survival of the fittest" and all that jazz.

                Essentially they want the government to act only as en enforcer for the concept of "private property" and "contracts" governing such. And maybe in charg



                • Being a libertarian has nothing to do with being a capitalist.

                  With that being said, yes I prefer the libertarian philosophy of capitalism over the other forms, but only because if it were done right the libertarian form of capitalism is the only form that could ever be considered fair.

                  It's survival of the fittest under any system. Libertarians just believe in allowing people to compete according to a set of rules which allow for fair competition.

                  Socialists on the other hand usually raise taxes on the middle
                  • With that being said, yes I prefer the libertarian philosophy of capitalism over the other forms, but only because if it were done right the libertarian form of capitalism is the only form that could ever be considered fair.

                    Which is, to put it gently, a logical fallacy. The "libertarian" form of capitalism is simply a staging ground for takeover by the most greedy and unscrupulous sociopaths. A starting point for feudalism, as in that "system" there is absolutely no provision for stopping a runaway accumu

              • I'd consider myself a libertarian socialist, socialism is good as long as liberty is maximized.

                Socialism is inherently illiberal. By forcing me to fund your idea of "social welfare", you are taking away my right to use my money (aka, my work, my accomplishments, my abilities) as I see fit. You are, in effect, robbing me. That you happen to be robbing me using government force instead of a gun, and that you are doing it in the name of good intentions, doesn't change the fact that you ARE robbing me.

                T

      • I am too really really sick of what's happening with all this "think of the children" craze. I've been trying to buy some software from EA Store (some booster packs for Battlefield 2 not some hardcore p0rn) and they tell me I need to buy from 23:00 to 06:00 because of some "young protection regulations" (the pack has some logo with "Violence"). What's the danger here? I give them a valid CC, I am (well) over 14/18/21. Are they thinking I'm somehow watched by some teens and they don't want to take any chance
      • Aw, little Susy sent out naked pictures to her friends? Great, let's educate her and her parents, ...

        How about just minding your own business and not presuming it's your place to 'educate' everyone who doesn't do what you think they should do?



      • Allow parents to create a list of personal information which can not be posted on Myspace from the IP address of the account of their child.

        Also allow parents to access a special portion of the site where they can monitor everything their teenager says on MySpace.

        And ISP's can also allow parents to access all the communications logs that are kept for 2 years for whatever purposes.

        As long as parents see what their kids are saying online, the parents will have the power to protect them from pedophiles. There

    • The problem is not going to be solved just by telling parents to supervise the internet.

      Yeah if the child is actually a child, as in under 15, then yes the parents should be supervising the internet for them, but what about when they are over 15 and under 18?

      How can you have a chatroom or a "space" on the inernet which is not commercial, but which restricts the age limit to 18+? That is the question I'm asking. The law says that 18+ cannot have unrestricted communication with those under 18. The laws are
      • How can you have a chatroom or a "space" on the inernet which is not commercial, but which restricts the age limit to 18+? That is the question I'm asking.

        You can't. That is the answer I'm giving. And you couldn't even before the popularity of the Internet, with Fidonet and individual dialup bulletin boards.

        The law says that 18+ cannot have unrestricted communication with those under 18. The laws are probably extreme, but these are the laws, and the technology has to adapt to the laws to protect their use


        • Look, I'd be fine if it wasn't reaching a point where people are being raided by the FBI for clicking illegal hyperlinks, but it has reached that point.

          It's time to do something radical technologically in my opinion. It's a lot cheaper to solve this technologically than to let bad laws ruin the internet experience for everyone.

          So how do you want to save the internet? I say the best way to do it is to build in technological and legal solutions which limit liability of websites and users of those websites and
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by DrLang21 ( 900992 )
      The reality of moves like this is that unless they require some kind of objective identification or background checks on every single user, minors will start accounts saying that they are older and pedophiles will start accounts saying that they are younger. The amusing conclusion is that pedophiles will only be hitting on eachother.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by swillden ( 191260 )

      While Facebook might have to provide some responsibility, the 49 states and Columbia should actually tell the PARENTS to supervise their child's usage of the internet.

      I'd like to see them implement parental supervision features, so that I can easily review what my kids are doing.

      The idea that parents should actively supervise and participate in their children's Internet usage SOUNDS good, but in practice it means two things: I have to spend all of my free time watching what my kids do on the net (leaving me no time for slashdot!), and I have to severely limit their Internet usage.

      This is especially problematic for parents with more than one or two children. I hav

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by russotto ( 537200 )

        The idea that parents should actively supervise and participate in their children's Internet usage SOUNDS good, but in practice it means two things: I have to spend all of my free time watching what my kids do on the net (leaving me no time for slashdot!), and I have to severely limit their Internet usage.
        Your kids, your problem. Don't try to screw up the Internet for the rest of us in an attempt to make it kid-safe enough to reduce your workload.
        • The idea that parents should actively supervise and participate in their children's Internet usage SOUNDS good, but in practice it means two things: I have to spend all of my free time watching what my kids do on the net (leaving me no time for slashdot!), and I have to severely limit their Internet usage.

          Your kids, your problem. Don't try to screw up the Internet for the rest of us in an attempt to make it kid-safe enough to reduce your workload.

          Did I ask for any screwing up of the Internet? I asked for Facebook and Myspace to implement some parental supervision support.

          Also, please consider that one day you, too, may grow up and be in my shoes.

          • The idea that parents should actively supervise and participate in their children's Internet usage SOUNDS good, but in practice it means two things: I have to spend all of my free time watching what my kids do on the net (leaving me no time for slashdot!), and I have to severely limit their Internet usage.

            Your kids, your problem. Don't try to screw up the Internet for the rest of us in an attempt to make it kid-safe enough to reduce your workload.

            Did I ask for any screwing up of the Internet? I asked for Facebook and Myspace to implement some parental supervision support.

            Also, please consider that one day you, too, may grow up and be in my shoes.

            Hey, I'm grown up and in your shoes, can I join your conversation?

            Your kids, your problem. Don't try to screw up the Internet for the rest of us in an attempt to make it kid-safe enough to reduce your workload.

    • Er, you do realize there are 50 states + WDC, right? Maybe your folks should supervise your geography usage better... ;)
  • Texas, huh (Score:5, Funny)

    by patio11 ( 857072 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @05:44AM (#23347840)
    You know, any time its 49 to 1 on states in America, you can be pretty sure that Texas is sitting out. Or perhaps Utah. Just once, I'd like to have a boring, milquetoast state like Rhode Island try to have a bit of a personality. "We're not a state! We're a Commonwealth! And we won't be having with any of your Internets!"

    Hey, it could happen.
    • I thought Massachusetts was the Commonwealth?
  • Age of majority (Score:5, Informative)

    by NoobixCube ( 1133473 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @05:49AM (#23347870) Journal
    I've always thought the broad-sweeping American-influenced use of age 18 on the internet is amazingly arrogant and blind. 18 is the arbitrary age of majority in some western cultures. In other western cultures, it's 21. In Japan (and perhaps other Asian countries, though I don't know), it's 20. Age of majority is probably even lower in some countries, and even higher in others.
    • except (Score:5, Informative)

      by nguy ( 1207026 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @06:14AM (#23347960)
      Except that the age of consent is actually lower in many countries, even if their age of majority is the same or higher.

      So, for example, in many places in Europe, the age of majority is 18, but the age of consent is 15. Even in the US, there are state-by-state discrepancies.
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by NoobixCube ( 1133473 )
        I was going to mention age of consent, but I thought it would seem like too much of a pointless rant if I went off on that tangent. In Australia, some states say 16, some say 17, and Victoria actually has a special provision, where the age of consent is 16, but if either or both people are under the age of consent, then there can't be more than two years' age difference. Strange, but at least it stops people from becoming sex offenders if they're 16 with a 15 year old girlfriend or boyfriend.
        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by LilGuy ( 150110 )
          You then did proceed to mention age of consent and you were correct in your thinking that it might end up a pointless rant.

          Well done.

      • Instead of having the age of consent be state by state, why don't these federal politicians who want to pass all these internet laws to ban free speech, simply pass one age of consent bill which once and for all sets the age of consent across the entire country?

        It's a lot easier to protect children when we actually know what a child is in the eyes of the law.
      • Try your northern neighbour. Here the age of majority is 18, but you can't buy booze and cigarettes until you're 19....and you can have sex at 14. Makes sense, no?
        • That's a hell of a wait for a post-coital cigarette :P
      • by iONiUM ( 530420 ) *
        It was 14 in Canada, or Ontario at least, but last week it was bumped to 16. I don't think many people knew that.
  • by mrcdeckard ( 810717 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @05:52AM (#23347880) Homepage
    before i get modded to hell, i'm usually not a doomsdayer.

    however, i think this may be the point that we have all been dreading since the internet began -- the day we have to provide *real* identification to get access to casual (non commerce) sites.

    i guess the glass-half-full part of me is wondering how facebook can verify age without compromising anonymity (and convenience for that matter).

    one way to address this is to not allow unverified people to network with minors (what adults really would, anyway, unless they're spying on them or, well, the pedophiles this system is trying to address). although this is a bit ageist in that this would require minors to provide real id. this doesn't actually address the issue, only postpones full-compliance to future generations. . .

    so, yeah. once this becomes commonplace (ie. when the infrastructure is in place), i can see the day when we all have to show our (real) ID at the door of every site we go to.

    often it occurs to me that i will be looking back to these days and think, "wow, those were the days when the internet was free," as i hold my nationalIDcard up to the computer screen to be scanned . . .

    mr c
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by FiestaFan ( 1258734 )

      one way to address this is to not allow unverified people to network with minors (what adults really would, anyway, unless they're spying on them or, well, the pedophiles this system is trying to address).
      What about someone who is 18 sending a message to someone who is 17? Or a grandmother sending her 13 year old granddaughter a message? Or a myriad of other circumstances?

      • yes. this is exactly my point. there is no good solution. so 79% of the internet population will suffer to protect 20% from the bad 1%

        it just gets dystopian from there . . .

        mr c
    • by nguy ( 1207026 )
      i guess the glass-half-full part of me is wondering how facebook can verify age without compromising anonymity (and convenience for that matter).

      Facebook doesn't want anonymous users; they make that quite clear when you sign up.


    • A safe internet, designed for minors to access. This internet should require adult verification from their parents allowing their children to access the sites.

      And an unrestricted unsafe internet where anything goes. And anyone who chooses to access this internet should be in no position to turn to lawsuits and press charges on people.

      The key is, you can't mix the two worlds. The best way to protect minors is to build an internet for minors. The current internet is designed for adults and is unrestricted bec
      • Yes. Minors should have parents. Parents should take care of them. Then can even restrict them from accessing chatrooms.
        There are lots of technological ways to do that.

        If you are a parent, have kids, and don't want to take care of them yourself, just don't allow them to use the internet. If you don't like the regular one, build a new one!

        No one is keeping you from doing that.
        There are lots of networks that are not connected to the internet.
        Of course, if you want it to work, good luck doing it without freedo
      • A safe internet, designed for minors to access. This internet should require adult verification from their parents allowing their children to access the sites.

        How do we stop the bad people accessing the kiddies' intarwebs ?

        Something has to be done.

        Indeed. Parents need to start taking some fucking responsibility.

        • by elucido ( 870205 )

          A safe internet, designed for minors to access. This internet should require adult verification from their parents allowing their children to access the sites.

          How do we stop the bad people accessing the kiddies' intarwebs ?

          Something has to be done.

          Indeed. Parents need to start taking some fucking responsibility.

          Why would an adult want to access the kiddie intraweb? Any adult who is trying to access these sorts of site should be investigated immediately.

          This will save resources.

          • by drsmithy ( 35869 )

            Why would an adult want to access the kiddie intraweb?

            Two immediately obvious examples, from both ends of the spectrum:
            * Paedophiles
            * Helicopter parents

            Any adult who is trying to access these sorts of site should be investigated immediately.

            Indeed. Heaven forbid parents be able to check up on what their children are doing (or, even crazier, offer some parental guidance), grandparents keep in contact with their grandchildren and an 18 year old date a 17 year old. Imagine the horrifyingly chaotic soc

            • by elucido ( 870205 )


              Better to investigate than not to investigate and have the entire internet be shut down.
              • by drsmithy ( 35869 )

                Better to investigate than not to investigate and have the entire internet be shut down.

                Investigate what ?

                The "entire internet" isn't going to get shut down, no matter what - and especially not over something as petty and irrelevant as minors and adults hanging around in the same forums.

                • by elucido ( 870205 )

                  The internet will be shutdown on suspicion of kiddie porn and pedophiles. And it's all MySpaces fault.
      • Why seek a technological solution for a problem that is simply a lack of parental control? If a person is under the age of majority then their parents are still responsible in part for their child's actions. It is a failure of parents to accept this responsibility that is the root cause of the problem, not some technological failure of the internet. When individuals become adults, at whatever age that might be locally, then they are fully responsible for their actions. Until that age, and whether they l
        • by elucido ( 870205 )

          This doesn't change the fact that parents have shifted the legal liability on website owners and internet users.
          • Facebook has reached an agreement with the attorneys general of 49 states and the District of Columbia to develop and enhance controls to protect minors from inappropriate content.

            Where in TFA does it say "that parents have shifted the legal liability on website owners and internet users"? They haven't as far as I can tell. They might want to blame someone else for their own short-comings but I expect that any reasonable court would tell the parents the truth and pull no punches while doing so.

            Facebook et al might agree to many things to make life safer for those who are not yet adults, but assuming responsibility for those minors is something that they haven't said they will do

            • Facebook has reached an agreement with the attorneys general of 49 states and the District of Columbia to develop and enhance controls to protect minors from inappropriate content.

              Where in TFA does it say "that parents have shifted the legal liability on website owners and internet users"? They haven't as far as I can tell. They might want to blame someone else for their own short-comings but I expect that any reasonable court would tell the parents the truth and pull no punches while doing so.

              Facebook et al might agree to many things to make life safer for those who are not yet adults, but assuming responsibility for those minors is something that they haven't said they will do, nor will they ever do so if I'm not mistaken.

              If you've been paying attention to the massive sequence of politically motivated legislation and many articles you will see that the laws are designed to shift the blame onto the internet.

              When those 8 girls beat up the 1 girl and it was posted on YouTube, the parents did not blame those 8 girls, the parents of the victim blamed YouTube and MySpace. They blame the internet.

              If you look at the laws being passed, the laws do not say that minors who enter "adult" chatrooms are liable, or that their parents are


    • As far as I'm concerned. It's better to be safe than sorry. Assume 18 is the absolute minimum age, because from a legal perspective, if they are over 18 then you can't be sued as easily.

      And I don't think we'd need ID's in every area of the internet. But if you want uncensored communication, because of how vague the current laws are, they can use the current laws to limit your free speech if minors are in the room.

      It would be best if minors were not in the room, or if you could have anonymous / secure / priv
  • by elucido ( 870205 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @06:20AM (#23347992)

    In my opinion, I see no reason for minors to be using the same social networking services as adults, and in my opinion if they are under 15 they shouldn't be on social networking sites at all.

    Can anything good come from letting minors access the adult oriented internet? We don't let them into clubs and bars, so why Myspace and Facebook?
    • That is really faulty logic. The legal reason why we don't let them into clubs and bars is because alcohol is served in those venues. Alcohol is not served on MySpace or Facebook.

      I think you have to remember that Facebook was started for college students, then extended to high school students. This isn't a case of minors trying to strongarm their way into "the adult oriented internet". It's quite the opposite. If anything, Facebook should probably shut their doors to those not affiliated with a college or h

      • Look, I'm not saying ban all who are under 15 from accessing the internet. If someone is under 15 and their parents give them permission to access the internet, they have every right to access the internet. Their parents should be responsible for monitoring their use of the internet if their parents believe their child has a right to access.

        However the current trend is that parents expect MySpace, and adult users of MySpace to change our behavior and protect THEIR kids from the dangerous internet. It's not
  • by arthurpaliden ( 939626 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @06:48AM (#23348118)
    Sounds good and does absolutly nothing. The best was to keep children safe on the internet is called ... wait for it ... PARENTING. So put the household computer in a high traffic area by the kitchen and take and interest in what your kids are doing.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by AikonMGB ( 1013995 )

      Bingo! As your kids are growing up, do not give them a computer with net access in their own room. Keep an eye on them; they are in uncharted territory and are learning as they go. Help them learn some of the dangers and pitfalls of the internet.

      As they grow up, you can gradually give them more privacy with computer and internet issues (as you should be giving them in other things as well), easing them into "adulthood." I don't understand how people expect an individual that has been sheltered her entire

  • by clickety6 ( 141178 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @07:10AM (#23348202)
    I've seen sites that ask for adult verification via a credit card number but how do you verify that a minor is a minor? See if they don't have a credit card?
    • by mgblst ( 80109 )
      Facebook solved this problem initially by requiring that you have a working University email address. Then they losened this requirement to increase numbers. Maybe they could just assume that everybody without a Uni email address is a minor, unless proven different, like credit card, etc...
  • It's all about the chiiiiildren!

    Whoring out the data of the adults to the commercial partners is just fine!
    Posting their private actions to all their facebook mates is just fine!

    Facebook are slimy bottomfeeders who don't give a shit about their users.

    But then, cui bono ? The users aren't paying Facebook, the advertisers and commercial partners are.

  • GoodLuckWithThat (Score:4, Insightful)

    by keirre23hu ( 638913 ) <j2k4real@gmail . c om> on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:04AM (#23348444) Homepage
    Because noone could ever get another free email from Yahoo/MSN/Google/RediffMail/DMX/insert free email provider here and register for a new account if they are operating under nefarious purposes, you know, like spammers do.

    Age verification technology - how will this work without requiring giving more personal information to facebook, who will then use it to further tail advertisements, could you imagine if they had your postal address?

    The only part that makes sense is alerting when minors send information to adults.... but to do that it means monitoring personal communication without a warrant, and how do they really _know_ the child and adult know each other in a non-threatening way, and on the other side, how do they know that they arent relatives or have some other benign relationship... The solution is for parents to be parents and stop letting the computer/tv/playstation/wii parent your kids for you... nobody forced you to become a parent, take some responsibility.

    "In the deal, the social network has agreed to develop age verification technology, send warning messages when an under-18 user may be giving personal information to an unknown adult, restrict the ability for people to change their ages on the site, and keep abreast of inappropriate content and harassment on the site. While the agreement is with U.S. state authorities, Kelly said that the tools deployed will apply to Facebook's international users as well. More than half of the site's 70 million users are outside the U.S."
  • by Manip ( 656104 ) on Friday May 09, 2008 @08:09AM (#23348472)
    Honestly why must adults who make up most of the population suffer for the minority?

    Just add a "Kid Flag" to the browsers. Have the parents set the "Kid Flag" and have sites have to enforce rules around it.

    e.g.
    If there is a kids flag either the service doesn't work or has reduced functionality.

    This allows parents to decide on the what age their kids are wise enough to use said services and puts the power entirely with the parents (as it should be).

    Stop trying to get everyone else to be a parent. I mean it seems like teachers, police, equipment makers, service providers, etc all have to be some kind of parent for all these silly like kids that these morons keep dropping into the world.

    Frankly the DNA pool might be better if some of the less intelligent kids (or kids with less intelligent parents) got taken out.
    • Just add a "Kid Flag" to the browsers. Have the parents set the "Kid Flag" and have sites have to enforce rules around it.

      Or even better... have the adult population actually grow up, think rationally for once and realize... it's a computer. It can't kill you (unless you bring it into the bathtub when it's plugged in). It can't hurt you (unless you drop it on your foot). All it can do is expose you to other peoples thoughts and ideas. If being exposed to other people's thoughts and ideas is all it take

  • Facebook IS the issue. It's Never the parents. All parents are perfect with the upbringing of their child. point the finger at... media. gta. facebook.
  • I liked facebook a lot more when it filled a certain niche in the market. MySpace was already out at this point and was huge, regretably huge, and facebook came along to fill a need. It started on college campuses, and really, thats the reason it was able to become so big so fast. I wish it remained that way. I'm not saying this to be elitist or anything, I just felt it was so much better when it was less customizable and I wasn't getting 800 invites to join the vampires versus werewolves game.

    Now because


    • Why did they open their product to children anyway?
      They should have kept it as an adult college generaton product. I'd probably still be using it if they didn't open it to everyone.

  • I'm 35 years old. When I was a kid I never could figure out exactly what it was that the world was trying to protect me from with all of the restrictions it placed upon what I could see or read.

    It didn't take me long to come to the conclusion that the motivation was malice against the young, because after all there was no way that grown people could actually be so collectively stupid as to believe the things they were telling me about how this or that was so harmful to me.

    As I grew older I realized that ye

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